Oscar Mauricio

Oscar Mauricio, 29, lives with his family. He makes a living raising pigs and cows, and also grows corn. He has worked in agriculture for several years, which has given him a lot of experience, allowing him to get the best harvests. His cropland has great growing potential. He sells everything he grows around the community where he lives, and he has a lot of customers who prefer him for the quality, good prices, and especially his incomparable service.

Oscar's an enterprising and very humble man and a fighter who dedicates himself to the maximum degree every day because he knows that he'll achieve the success he wants so much.

In the last growing season he had some losses and he wants to recover. He needs capital so he's asking Integral for a loan to buy livestock, corn seed, insecticide, etc.

Oscar Mauricio has a good payment record and is very responsible. He's certain that he'll be able to repay the debt and also trusts that he'll bring financial security to his household.

Additional Information

More information about this loan

This loan is part of Apoyo Integral's program to help subsistence farmers located in high-risk regions of El Salvador, including coastal strips, river banks, and volcano fault lines. The program, which offers reduced interest rates, targets farmers who don't qualify for formal funding due to their low-income and geographical risk. By funding this loan, you are helping Apoyo and a local non-governmental organization extend risk-tolerant credit to even more farmers.

About Apoyo Integral

Apoyo Integral (Apoyo) is a nonprofit organization offering financial products that enable clients to increase their working capital, purchase fixed assets, buy and remodel homes, expand agricultural business and more. The organization’s target group is businessmen and women who have already established their businesses but need financial support to strengthen or expand them.

Like Kiva, Apoyo is committed to empowering women involved in business activities in rural areas. Kiva lenders’ funds will be used to expand these services to an even greater number of poor clients in rural areas.